To read this content please select one of the options below:

The Delegation of Decision Rights: An Experimental Investigation

Advances in Management Accounting

ISBN: 978-1-78560-972-5, eISBN: 978-1-78560-971-8

Publication date: 23 November 2016

Abstract

Purpose

Despite the benefits of delegation, anecdotal and survey-based evidence suggests that firms do not optimally delegate decision-making authority. However, to date, no quantifiable evidence supports this claim.

Methodology/approach

We design an experiment to explore the superior’s choice between delegation and information elicitation. We also examine the effect of the superiors’ choice on the amount of effort provided by subordinates to gather decision-facilitating information.

Findings

We find that, compared to economic predictions, superiors delegate less often than they should. Subordinates exert lower effort when superiors elicit information than when superiors delegate the decision to them. As a result, superiors earn lower profit when they elicit information than when they delegate decision-making authority.

Research implications

Our empirical evidence supports two main tenets espoused in the literature on the allocation of decision rights. First, the evidence of under delegation contributes to the literature which maintains that superiors’ tendency to under-delegate leads firms to become overly centralized.

Originality/value

By designing a novel experimental, we identify systematic ways in which behavior deviates from economic theory and contribute to the discussion on how firms utilize information. In particular, under delegation prevents firms from exploiting economies that arise from local capabilities and task specialization, and results in forgone profits.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Acknowledgments

This paper has benefited from helpful insights from Sean Pfeffer, Doug Stevens, Jeremy Lill, Michael Mjerczyk, Ivo Tafkov, Flora Zhou, Stephan Kramer, Nadine Funcke, Paolo Perego, Marcel van Rinsum, and workshop participants at The University of Kentucky, Erasmus University, Georgia State University, and the 2013 Management Accounting Conference. We thank Colorado State University for providing funding for this study.

Citation

Coats, J.C. and Rankin, F.W. (2016), "The Delegation of Decision Rights: An Experimental Investigation", Advances in Management Accounting (Advances in Management Accounting, Vol. 27), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 39-71. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1474-787120160000027002

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2017 Emerald Group Publishing Limited